On the evening of March 13th 2003 a small group of well-wishers met in the Old Hall, Heckmondwike, West Yorkshire, Joseph Priestley's boyhood home. The topic of discussion was how we might celebrate the bicentenary of the life and legacy of Priestley (Born 13th March 1733 in Birstall; died 6th February 1804 Northumberland Pennsylvania USA) It was resolved that the forthcoming 2004 Bicentennial would not pass unheralded, at least in West Yorkshire.This Commemorative Collection represents the culmination of those early deliberations, three years on, and summarises in a single volume, the recorded contributions of many Priestley scholars, exhibitors and distinguished lecturers from the UK and North America. Events began at 10.30 on the morning of Friday 6th February 2004 with a walk from the Priestley birthplace at Fieldhead to the Old Hall, now the home of the Priestley Society. The following day, celebrations continued with a colloquium of invited speakers and scholars at Oakwell Hall in Birstall. The same day, the Priestley Society held its Inaugural General Meeting and became an official body with a constitution and a mission statement.One objective of the Society's mission is to correct the myths that Priestley was some kind of unpatriotic rebel, and to reverse the institutionalised neglect of Britain's immensely rich Priestley heritage.
One only needs to examine BBC programmes to see the need for a Priestley Society. On April 7th 1994, the 200th Anniversary of the Priestleys' leaving for America, Priestley supporter, Bernard Howgate, wrote a letter to the "Batley News". In that letter, he complained about the BBC. The title of his article was Will Britain ever Honour this Man?. A noteworthy citation in Mr. Howgate's letter is a BBC programme "Horizon", broadcast on October 13th 1983 in which Dr Priestley was given faint praise for one scientific discovery, but denounced as a rebellious 'red', a 'left-wing' rebel. Although these terms didn't exist in Priestley's day, nothing could be further from the truth.He spent his whole life campaigning for civil, political, and religious liberty, and was indeed fearful of the corrupting role of Government in religion and education. He campaigned relentlessly in search of truth, and would have been opposed to any broadcasting organisation being used as an instrument of government. Recently the BBC made popular capital by broadcasting a series of programmes to find The Greatest Briton Ever.
Starting with a hundred names, programme by programme the BBC reduced the field to ten grand finalists included two scientists (Newton and Darwin), an engineer (Brunel), an explorer (Cook), a playwright (Shakespeare) a pop-singer (Lennon), an admiral (Nelson), a politician (Churchill) and royalty (Queen Elizabeth I and Princess Diana).Sir Winston Churchill won the BBC's Greatest Briton Ever nomination in the Grand Final screened on Sunday 2 February 2003. How could the name of Joseph Priestley possibly not even be included in the BBC's starting line-up of all time British greats? These proceedings of the Bicentennial Year are now part of the testimony that the legacy of Joseph Priestley, in any single one of the areas of science, education, religion and politics, far outweighs the narrow achievements of any individual listed in the BBC's grand finalists, let alone the 100 starters from which he was excluded. Indeed, if one searched worldwide for the greatest achiever of mankind, it would be hard to find a stronger candidate than Joseph Priestley. He should be up there with the great world reformers who have contributed to civilization, from Socrates to Ghandi.Part of the explanation undoubtedly rests in the old adage "Don't mix politics with religion".
Why not, one might reasonably ask? Politics and religion are indeed inextricably linked and, moreover, the connections have bedevilled the Government of Britain for at least a thousand years and continue to do so. It is also often advised that one should not mix religion with science. Again, we might ask, why not? Perhaps it's because truth, in the form of natural knowledge, rests with the scientists, but power and influence remains with the religious bigots.Priestley mixed religion, politics and science in a life of rich academic bequests. In seeking out the truth, he observed that the religious powers that be, within a corrupt 'Church and Monarchy' were suppressing advancements in science, education and civil liberty in the maintenance of their privileged power base for which there was neither legitimate constitutional nor rational basis. When there was no science there was no conflict. With the advent of science, the need for religion is debatable; nevertheless, religion remains an instrument of suppression and control in every country in the world today.Priestley's earliest claim to greatness is in the field of education.
As a young graduate from the dissenter's Academy at Daventry, he opened a private school in Nantwich, where the education was so enlightened that it began to attract attention over a wide area. After three years he was recruited as a tutor to Warrington Academy, which emerged as the leading nonconformist college in England. Over a period of six years, Priestley so modernised and improved education there, that Warrington became the finest centre of educational excellence in the known world, outstripping even those theological university establishments of Oxford and Cambridge.The globes that Priestley designed for teaching geography and astronomy, terrestrial and celestial respectively, are now in Harris Manchester College Oxford, and described here in these pages. In his postgraduate studies, "Britain's only Priestley PhD scholar", Dr Norman Rose, concludes that Priestley greatly surpassed all other authors in the English speaking world combined, and that his achievements on education alone would qualify him for the BBC's Greatest Briton Ever. Priestley's discovery of the element-of-life oxygen is legendary.
What is not well known, however, except to historians of science, is that he also made fundamental experimental discoveries and inventions in many other areas of chemistry and related sciences. Besides oxygen, he discovered and characterized nine other gases, including the oxides of nitrogen and carbon, and ammonia. It has often been stated that his discovery of oxygen, and later nitrous oxide, the first anaesthetic, was a landmark in medicine.Priestley is recognised as a founder of modern medicine; he discovered that dark venous blood turns bright red in the presence of oxygen and that the process is reversible, and went on to explain the role of the blood in oxygen transport and even proposed that the body's use of oxygen and the oxidation of metals were similar phenomena. Priestley's curiosity of the new element oxygen led to his discovery of the process of photosynthesis and the production of oxygen by plant life.
In 1768, Priestley deduced and published Coulomb's law of electrostatic forces 20 years before Coulomb; he discovered the electrical conductivity of charcoal, and he established the connection between electricity and chemical reactions when he decomposed ammonia with electricity, 70 years before Faraday.If Newton and Darwin were Britain's founding fathers of Physics and Biology, respectively, Joseph Priestley was surely Britain's founding father of Chemistry. On the scientific criterion alone, why, we might ask the Royal Mint, is not Joseph Priestley up there as a great Briton alongside Newton (GBP1 note), Darwin (GBP10 note) and Faraday (GBP20 note)? In Appendix III we see that Britain's founding father of Chemistry was indeed commemorated on Britain's coinage, two halfpenny tokens. The first shows Priestley hanging from a gibbet for his alleged support for a British-style French revolution, and the second shows him as the head of a snake, responsible for attempting to burn down the House of Commons. Both implied allegations were, of course, without foundation.In religion, Priestley played a key role in recognising and publicising that the basis of religious discrimination is power and control of peoples' lives, and exaltation of religious leaders.
Priestley recognised that the degeneration of religions was more to do with perpetuation of power and corruption of principles, than theology. His reconciliation of different religions, advocacy of the separation of Church and State, call for the abolition of religious dogma, and foundation of Unitarianism, were major advancements in the history of religion. The First Unitarian church of Philadelphia originated in a series of sermons Priestley gave in that city and marked the beginning of Unitarianism in North America. Priestley's contribution to religion would also qualify his candidacy for one of the greatest Britons.Yet, it is the political legacy of Joseph Priestley that puts him up there above Churchill; it has been of immense consequence in the USA, the country we must thank for victory in two world wars of the 20th Century. In 1768 Priestley published his "Essay on the First Principles of Government and on the Nature of Civil Political and Religious Liberty". A year later, in 1769, he wrote "On the present state of Civil and Religious Liberty in Great Britain and her Colonies".
In the preface to the first Essay, he lamented that there was no nation in the world whose government satisfied the principles he advocated. Just eight years later came the American Declaration of Independence, and the nation of states, with the civil, political and religious liberties that Priestley had so precisely described, became the reality.His political ideas on the importance of separation of Church and State, civil liberty, and the concept of a Supreme Court appointed by elected representatives, for example, were accepted by the Founding Fathers of the United States and enshrined into the US Constitution and Bill of Rights.In the following pages, the Priestley Society brings a new dimension of truthfulness, in the spirit of Priestley himself, to the recognition and celebration of his life and the promotion of his ideals. The Priestley heritage trail begins, in West Yorkshire.This "Life and Legacy" collection hopefully, will be seen as a landmark in the beginning of the re-establishment and reconciliation of Joseph Priestley, as a British patriot and 'Citizen of the World' (see APPENDIX III).
2004 marks the beginning of a campaign by the Priestley Society to educate the people of Great Britain, and the wider international community. Henceforth, March 13th has been designated Priestley Day in West Yorkshire. July 4th will also mark an annual celebration, not just in the United States. For the first time in 2004, as described in these pages, we saw American Independence celebrated in the United Kingdom. We hope also that the first Priestley Society July 4th Annual Lecture, presented by Priestley's descendent Dr. Priestley Toulmin, and published here, will become an annual thank-you to Joseph Priestley for his great achievements and for his unique contribution to the civilisation of humanity.
- ISBN10 1904244440
- ISBN13 9781904244448
- Publish Date 6 February 2007
- Publish Status Out of Print
- Out of Print 11 October 2021
- Publish Country GB
- Publisher Carnegie Publishing Ltd
- Imprint Scotforth Books
- Format Paperback
- Pages 288
- Language English